Monday, June 23, 2008

Road trip

My friend Dorothy and her son John took John's daughters to camp yesterday, and two days earlier, Dorothy had invited me to come along. So Saturday evening I stuffed a few things in a daypack and joined them.

Camp Towonga is in the Sierra, near Yosemite, so following a stop in Groveland for a picnic lunch, we deposited the girls at camp and took Hwy 120 up to Tuolumne Meadows. We stopped first at the west end of the meadow and followed the trail over to Pothole Dome and walked up it about halfway. From there we had a great view of Cathedral, Unicorn and Cockscomb (sp?) peaks and the meadow below, ribboned with water. All that exfoliating granite encircling us . . . unlike any place else on earth.

Descending from there, we drove a bit farther and walked up the trail toward Soda Spring. The trail crosses the Tuolumne River, small at this elevation but moving quickly, a portent of its much stronger and swifter iteration as it drops down the mountain. At Soda Spring, I scooped up a handful of the carbonated water that bubbles mysteriously from the rock; it tasted a bit like Alka-Seltzer. On the way back to the road, encountered a half-dozen or so marmots, fat and sleek, snuffling through the grass. They look like sombody's pet, soft and furry and cute.

Once back to the car, we drove to Olmstead Point and gazed out over the valley (terribly hazy due to so many fires). Past Tenaya Lake and up and over Tioga Pass, elev. 9,943 ft., and I got a good look at Mt. Dana; some years ago I hiked to the very top of that mountain. It's 13,061 feet high, and other than as a passenger in an airplane, the highest place I've ever been.

Once over the pass, the road descends steeply through a landscape completely different than that on the west side of the Sierra—drier, harsher, unglaciated. Found a place to stay in Lee Vining—a motel that has as one of its "rooms" a double-wide mobile home. For $150, we each had our own queen-sized bed in our own bedroom; two bathrooms. There was also a kitchen and a large living room (with a fireplace), but we took no advantage of those; instead, we went to dinner at the Whoa Nellie Deli, conveniently located inside the Mobil station at the foot of Tioga Pass—unprepossessing ambience, fantastic (and unlikely) menu, deliciously prepared. Dorothy and I had fish tacos; John had ahi tuna.

This morning John got on his bike and rode north on 395; Dorothy and I split a bear claw with coffee in the garden of the motel, then headed up the highway, meeting John at Walker Burger in Walker. From there we drove into Reno, where John lives; he took us to the Greyhound station and we boarded the 12:30 bus to Sacramento, arriving around 3:30. I'd left my car at the bus depot Sunday morning, and so drove Dorothy home before heading back to Davis.

Gone from home less than 36 hours . . . the best kind of road trip there is.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sounds like a great road trip indeed, though a bit hard on the poor back if your back's a bit off (as mine is, having helped some friends move on Saturday).

Lee Vining's great. We also ate at that place in the Mobil Station, weirdly good.

Anonymous said...

Barb, it's been awhile since I visited the blog--always entertaining and enlightening! As I was reading about you coming over 120 and stopping in Lee Vining, I was thinking, oh I hope they found Whoa Nellie. Sure enough, scrolled down and you had. Fabulous food. I would recommend just hanging out in the area to visit Bodie (the ghost town), Mono Lake and other spots and just come back to the gas station for breakfast, lunch and dinner so you can sample some of the other great stuff on the menu!!

Infield Single said...

I've been to Bodie, years ago; a then-boyfriend had a friend who was a ranger there, and we got an insider's look at the place, including the interiors of many of the buildings, which are closed (or used to be) to the public. The ranger and his fiancee got married in the Bodie church; the wedding party and guests all wore period dress. Lots o' fun. Only visited Mono Lake and the tufas once or twice and want to go back, and the Whoa Nellie Deli offers extra incentive. All said, I prefer the east side to the western slope of the Sierra; the spareness draws me.

The Fevered Brain said...

What a great trip. Thanks so much for all the information, tips, insights. The restaurant seems to be a hit with all your readers. We must try it.